MYTHOS | Easter FACTS 🙃🐣

Murielle Mobengo • avr. 17, 2022

MYTHOS

Easter symbolism 🥚 

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Revue {R} is a polymath review of Mythology. We love symbols, not only what they mean but how, where and why they were born. So here’s our FACT sheet on Easter MYTH.

WHAT ?

Easter is rooted in Jewish Passover (Pesach), a festival celebrating the Exodus from Egypt and the beginning of the barley harvest season. In Christian mythology, Easter marks Resurrection Sunday, the day Jesus Christ (a Yogi among many others) triumphed over death. But the etymology of "Easter" has a lot more to tell.

WHEN ?

The Roman month of April, which comes after the spring equinox, was once labeled Eostur-Monath. According to historian Bede (725), pagan Anglo-Saxons used to celebrate a goddess named Eostre during what now corresponds to Easter. So, Easter's pagan?

HOW ?

Spring equinox marks the day when the sun rises in the East. 

Jacob Grimm, the famous mythologist, philologist, and storyteller, associates Eostre with the Roman Aurora, the Baltic Ausra, and the Greek Eos. The three female deities may derive from the same Indo-European deity, Hausos, refered to as Ushas in the Vedas.

Revered in 40 sacred poems, Ushas is the goddess of dawn. In Vedic mythology, she presides over cosmic order, action, and breath. She is the life of life of every creature, the Vedas tell us. She is also referred to as Rta, a possible Sanskrit etymology of "art" and "rhythm."

WHY ?

Ancient cultures in the East and Middle East used to celebrate the return of light and the cyclic rebirth of nature after the long winter months in rituals mirroring the awakening of light (the deity) within us.

The Rigveda–a Sanskrit codification of sacred poems and practices dating back 1500-900 BCE–mentions Hiranyagarbha (hira-nea-a-garb'a), a self-created cosmic egg. Early Eastern mysticism expounds Hiranyagarbha or "golden womb" as the source of creation in Vedic poetry (Rig-Veda Mandala 10,121).

Within this oval primal cause resides Prajapati, "the lord of creatures," identified with the creator God Brahma in post-Vedic era. His female counterpart is Vac/Saraswati, the supreme word and goddess of poetry, myth, science and the arts, alternatively associated with Ushas.

Sanskrit belongs to the family of Indo-European languages, a group of dialects spoken in most of Europe, areas of European settlement (which includes Australia, America, but also Sub-Saharan Africa) and in much of southwest and south Asia.

This linguistic group also includes extinct languages in which modern western parlance originated: Germanic, Roman, Celtic, Old Iranian, and Ancient Greek.

The existence of Indo-european languages attests to cultural connections between earliest peoples of the East and the West. Certainly, migrations helped in spreading proteiform mythologies.

Now, we've traced the Goddess back in linear time and realized her presence beyond monotheism, paganism, and all manner of isms. The divine feminine (the divine manifest) persists in our subconscious, finding expression in traditions, rites, and myths whose meaning needs to be rediscovered, actualized, and transcended.

Everything is a symbol. Religions are man-made. How powerful (wo)man must be!

Happy Ushas-Eostre month, 
wherever you are, 
whether you are 
celebrating 
or not.

Good reads

  • The Rig Vedas
  • The Illustrated Signs & Symbols Sourcebook, Adele Nozedar
  • Les Dieux Menteurs, Françoise Gange (French)


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Revue Revolution, a polymath review of Poetry-Art

Murielle Mobengo is a Poet, editor-in-chief, founder of {R} and co-founder of The Polymath Agency M/L. She inquires poetic existence, the origins of Poetry, and its proximity with Mythology, the religious sources of Art, and Philosophy. She composes in English, French, German, and has a fondness for Western ancient languages & Sanskrit. Passionate about symbols–which in her opinion and as a whole, express pantheism–, Murielle defines herself as a symbolist and a mythologist. Murielle Mobengo is a disciple of Kashmiri Shaivism, the non-dualist Eastern philosophy where Yoga originated.

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